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Herbert Rosinski papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: MSC-091

Scope and Contents

The collection consists of ten boxes of papers which fully document Rosinski' s personal life and academic career, both in Europe and America. They are divided into six series: Personal records, Correspondence, Writings, Lectures and Seminars, Unpublished Writings, and Notes and Outlines. These designations follow the sequence and numerical designations assigned to them by Dr. Stebbins.

Series I, Personal records, contains biographical statements, photographs, fellowship applications, income tax records, medical records, estate records and copies of his obituary.

Correspondence, Series II, contains both letters to and from Rosinski and correspondence initiated by Dr. Richard P. Stebbins and Dr. Evelyn M. Cherpak, regarding the location of Rosinski manuscripts in other libraries. The correspondence series is arranged alphabetically and chronologically within, except for several folders (arranged by subject) containing correspondence written in German and sent by Rosinski from India in 1948-1949 and from Europe in 1958-1961. The latter are addressed to Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Stebbins. The bulk of the correspondence is with military leaders, political figures, publishing houses, universities and private think tanks and focuses on his academic appointments, research work and publications, lecturerships, contracts for services and books and letters of congratulations and appreciation. Also included in this series are ten folders labelled miscellaneous correspondence containing letters received by Rosinski and the Stebbinses on professional and career matters as well as letters of condolence. These letters are in German, English and French.

Published Writings, Series III, contains copies of Rosinski's major books, pamphlets, articles, book reviews and letters to the editor which appeared in U.S. and foreign periodicals. These works are in English and German and date from 1930-1977. They include studies on Sea Power, Warfare, National Defense, Clausewitz, Mahan, the Strategy of War, German Naval Thought, and Japan.

Series IV consists of lectures and seminar presentations covering the years 193 7 -1956. Rosinski lectured extensively throughout his academic career at universities, war colleges and conferences both here are abroad. His topics ranged from sea power to Soviet strategy and Mahan and Corbett. These presentations were given in both English and German.

Unpublished Writings are contained in Series V and consist of holograph and typescript articles, editorials, reviews and accounts of conversations written during the years 1935-1962. They, like many of the other items in the collection, are annotated by Richard P. Stebbins and are in both English and German. The last series, Notes and Outlines, contains materials on German affairs, military affairs, seapower and air power.

Dates

  • Creation: 1903 - 1985

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Access is open to all researchers, unless otherwise specified.

Conditions Governing Use

Material in this collection is in the public domain, unless otherwise noted.

Biographical Note

Herbert F. Rosinski was born on January 30, 1903, in Konigsberg, East Prussia to Dr. Bernhard Rosinski, a medical doctor and professor at the University of Konigsberg, and Sophie Leo Rosinski. He attended the Royal Wilhelms Academy and studied history, archeology and Egyptology at the Universities of T ubingen, Konigsberg and Berlin. This was followed by visits to archeological sites in Greece and Egypt.

In 1925, the Rosinski family moved to Berlin where young Herbert continued his studies at the University of Berlin. He studied Japanese language and civilization at the University's seminar for Oriental languages and passed the Interpreters Examination with distinction in 1927. In 1930, he received the Doctor of Philosophy degree, magna cum laude, for his dissertation entitled "Studies on the Problem of Autarky in Japan." He continued post-doctoral studies there in the fields of political geography, economics and sociology. The 1930s were a period of great professional achievement and personal change for Rosinski. Intellectually, he was well on his way to making his mark in military studies, with a spate of articles to his name, lectures at the German Naval Staff College and Oxford University, and, in 1939, the European publication of "The German Army," his seminal work. In 1934, he married Maria-Luise Tripp and the following year he was barred from intellectual and cultural activities because of his Jewish ancestry. (His maternal grandfather was Jewish.) He emigrated to London, England, in 1936 where he received a special grant from the Julian Corbett Prize Fund to pursue studies on Mahan, Corbett, and Castex. He was interned briefly as an enemy alien when England declared war on Germany in 1939.

Given wartime conditions in Europe, Rosinski emigrated to the United States in 1940. Upon arrival, he accepted an appointment at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. He continued to lecture and write on naval, military, and foreign policy topics during the 1940s. His articles were published in Brassey's Naval Annual Yale Review, Infantry Journal, Military Affairs and The Amerkan Historical Review. In 1944, a revised edition of The German Army was published. During this decade, he was affiliated with the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy as a lecturer and with the Voice of America. In 1948-1949, he visited India where he lectured to Indian Army Generals and interviewed Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, a high point in his academic career.

The 1950s saw Rosinski a frequent lecturer at the National War College and the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. There he made the acquaintance of Rear Admiral Henry E. Eccles who became a lifelong friend and intellectual mentor. In 1951, he began an affiliation with the Council on Foreign Relations which lasted a decade. Research and writing continued to absorb much of his time as he authored several unpublished studies, including The Evolution of Warfare, Halder Study and Power and Peace. He made four separate study tours of Europe in connection with research for these works.

Herbert Rosinski died on February 27, 1962, in New York, after suffering his second heart attack. Rosinski's works were reprinted in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Power and Human Destiny, an adaptation of Power and Peace, was edited by Dr. Richard Stebbins and published in 1965; a new edition of The German Army in 1966; The Development of Naval Thought, a compilation of his contributions to Brassey's Naval Annual, edited by B. Mitchell Simpson III and published by the Nava1 War College Press in 1977; and a Gennan version of his doctoral dissertation, Autarky in Japan in 1982.

Career Outline

1903
Born, January 30, Konigsberg, East Prussia, Germany.
1911-1921
Attended Royal Wilhelms Gymnasium, Konigsberg.
1921-1925
Student at Universities of Tubingen, Konigsberg, Berlin and Halle.
1925-1930
Postdoctoral studies at University of Berlin.
1932-1935
Lectures and writes on military and naval topics and Japan.
1934
June 2, Marries Maria-Luise Tripp.
1935
Barred from educational and cultural activities because of Jewish ancestry.
1936
Emigrated from Germany to England.
1937
Lectured at Oxford University.
1938
Received grant from Julian Corbett Prize Fund for studies on Mahan, Corbett, Castex.
1939
Interned as enemy alien upon outbreak of war with Germany. Publication of "The German Army."
1940
Admitted as visitor to U.S.; Accepted Appointment as a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey.
1941
Appointed Lecturer at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.
1942
Publication of "Sea Power in the Pacific" with W.B. Ellinger.
1944
Publication of revised edition of "The German Army."
1944-1945
Military Analyst for the Voice of America.
1946
Lectured at Naval War College, Industrial College of the Armed Forces, and Canadian Institute of International Affairs.
1948-1949
Visited and lectured in India.
1949
Visited and lectured in England and Switzerland; Divorced from Maria-Luise Rosinski.
1951-1961
Council on Foreign Relations, New York, New York, Researcher.
1953
Became naturalized citizen.
1955
Council on Foreign Relations, New York, New York, Member.
1957-1958
Power and Peace Project sponsored by the Twentieth Century Fund.
1959
Institute for Strategic Studies, London, England, Member.
1962
Died, February 27, New York, New York.

Extent

10 boxes

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Personal and career items and bibliography, 1903–1966; Correspondence, letters sent and received from individuals and organizations, 1948–1985; Published and unpublished writings, including books, articles, reviews, lectures and seminars; Pamphlets, 1930–1977; Notes and outlines, undated–1951.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

The papers of Herbert F. Rosinski, military historian and strategist, were presented to the Naval War College Foundation for deposit in the Naval Historical Collection by Dr. Richard P. Stebbins of Boston, Massachusetts in August 1987. Stebbins was a friend and colleague of Rosinski for many years and he prepared the collection for transfer, adding an inventory of Rosinski' s publications and a biographical outline. He also annotated much of the material.

Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Naval War College Archives Repository

Contact:
US Naval War College
686 Cushing Rd
Newport RI 02841 US